Tag Archives: Nature

Irrelevance is the Distraction

Really? Am I writing this post, my third one in a week, (News Alert Humans Like to Socialize and Shackled By Fear) about how computers and the Internet are ruining our children’s lives? More importantly are you reading it? Are we not past this topic yet? News flash! The use of technology, whatever that nebulous term even means, is changing the world and nowhere is this shift more apparent than in our schools. Why? Because most schools are based on antiquated models of what learning used to look like. We can bemoan the fact that students no longer want to sit dopey eyed in rows and hear us ramble on and on about whatever we feel is the most important thing in the world, but really wouldn’t it be better if we started to learn how to bridge our two worlds?

We’ve all heard it before; I am not saying anything new, which begs the question why am I writing this post? Why are you reading? Why can’t we seem to move forward? Why do we need a six-page New York Times article telling us that teenagers are distracted and Facebooking instead of reading novels?

My main gripe and perhaps the impetus of my new crusade is that I refuse to be polarized by the Ed-tech evangelists and the paranoid chalk and talk dinosaurs. I refuse to be forced to make a choice between the book and the computer, between the organic and the digital, between a walk in the woods and a flight through second life, between “real” and virtual life. I refuse to believe that there is only one way to reach young people today. I want to be able to reach them on their level by helping them understand identity creation and digital footprints, but I also want to reach them on their level by taking trips into nature where we write poetry about what we see. There is a middle ground between kids watching Brain Pop videos and creating Power Point videos no one will ever see and calling it integrated technology, and doing worksheets; it is called teaching. It is not the technology that is distracting kids, it is the irrelevance of what we are teaching them and our inability to make it meaningful. You can teach under a tree with a piece of chalk if the kids are buying what you are selling. How do you do that, you may ask? Well that is the million-dollar question isn’t it? I am still learning. That’s the beauty of teaching.

This latest article epitomizes this polarity. Offering examples of exasperated teachers who can’t get their students to read a book versus the cool guy teacher, who is teaching them how to use Pro-Tools, doesn’t help our understanding. We simply cannot make students, teachers, and parents choose between being connected and “tech savvy” and “Old School.” There has to be a middle ground. Where are the stories about teachers who have infused technology to make it ubiquitous like air, (Love that Chris Lehmann quote) so that students can use their talents and newly found knowledge to change the world? Where are the stories about teachers who with passion and love of literature have convinced seventh graders that the pages in a novel can be just as excited or more so that a Facebook feed. I mean really, do we have such little faith in literature that we think a text message is competing with John Steinbeck? If you believe in what you teach and you make it relevant for your students there is nothing they won’t stop doing to follow where you lead.

It is still possible to connect to students without bells and whistles and show them the beauty of well-written prose or the magic of science. I am tired of both sides thinking that students will only learn and stay engaged if the teacher offers a technological carrot. I can no longer, with a straight face say, “It is about the learning and not the tools.” I cannot say that teachers need to create and build meaningful relationships with their students based on trust and honesty if they want them to read on their own.

I could go on and on, but you have heard it all before, and unfortunately most people who will read this post already agree with me, so maybe this connected technology is not as great as it appears. Besides, I have a movie to start editing and I am feeling a bit distracted after reading a six-page article. Maybe, if I can get my work done in time I can actually curl up with a good book. It is really a collection of online columns. Does that count?

Mother Nature in the Digital Age

A friend posted this video on his Facebook page:

Which illicited this response:

I dig it… but they left out the natural world… they talk about technology and community… community is best modeled in ecosystems in balance… symbiosis, commensalism, mutualism, parasitism.. not sure where nature fits into their di…alogue… but its most often left out when we get seduced by technology… my internet wont work here when it rains too hard!

One thing is for sure… we cant live without the ecosystem services provided by the natural world… but technology tends to removes us from that reality when used they way it has been used up until now… the school of the future should arise from the natural community and landscape where it is.. not be superimposed and plonked on top of it…

I dig it.. but they left out some crucial stuff… methinks!

To which I responded:

You make some great points Kenny, and I agree completely, but we must be careful not to make the issue of technology versus nature black and white, as many do when discussing technology. There must a balanced approach, and I agree that kids need to be reminded that the natural world is even there at times. It is a shame when you see young people more engrossed in a text message than a passing cloud, but we cannot hold the technology responsible for what is basically a cultural void and migration away from the natural world. Sure the tech has helped speed this up, but if put in the right hands the tech can also be a tool to bring us back to nature and community.

I see the social web and the gadgets that connect us to it, as mere reflections of our personal and cultural norms. What you put out there and what you share is an echo of what rustles in your soul, and for kids unfortunately this tends to be nothing more than shallow noise. But what if, we awaken in them a love of nature, art, and community and teach them how to use the tools they already love to share, connect and build solutions.

Remember at the other end of every screen is a person. These tools are not pulling us apart, they are bringing us together. What we say and what we share is up to us. Do we use Facebook as a place to chatter or have deep conversations?

Look at this thread, how can we move kids to this point?

This is an issue I have been pondering for some time- the dialectic between technology and the natural world- I know I did not even come close to doing it justice with this quick free write, but I would love to hear your thoughts as I begin to flush out my ideas further. What do you think? Can technology be used as a tool to move back toward nature? What is the role of nature in the digital age?